SOPA Markup on Hold. Now What?

In an unexpected move this morning, the House Judiciary Committee voted to suspend the markup of the hotly-contested Stop Online Piracy Act until the "next reasonable business day." To the 10,180 of you who (as of this writing) have made phone calls to your respective legislators, consider the beginning of this post a hearty, well-deserved congratulatory pat on the back.

The good news is that we now have more time to sway more hearts and minds on the committee and in the Congress and educate them as to why SOPA is such bad legislation in its current form.

The bad news is, the next meeting could be as early as Tuesday.

Let's keep the pressure on. Your voice is working. We heard that loud and clear in the halls of Congress this week. Now is the time to double down, make another phone call and let Congress know that as it stands right now, we stand united against SOPA and for finding a new way forward.

You can make a call right now at engineadvocacy.org/voice and now is the perfect time to let Congress know you won't stand for an internet that is easily censored and made insecure.

Thank you for your work so far, and for the work we all will do over the next weeks and months. The tide is turning in our favor, so stand up, keep fighting, and together we can protect the this essential resource in our lives.

UPDATE: Chairman Smith has scheduled the next round of markup for next Wednesday, December 21st according to multiple sources.

Internet Censorship in Malaysia

We’ve heard through third parties that there have been a number of inquiries from both the Malaysian government and in-country press expressing disapproval for our having included their nation in our ad on Wednesday. They object to being listed along with China and Iran as example governments who have been known to censor Internet traffic within their borders.

We included Malaysia in this list because it recently ordered various sites to be blocked for copyright reasons without meaningful due process for the affected sites -- just as the current versions of SOPA and PIPA in the United States would propose to do.

The Malaysian government's desire to stop large-scale, commercial piracy is an admirable goal, and one that we agree with, but site blocking is not the right way to do it -- it censors legal content unnecessarily (like the legitimate artists who use sites Megaupload to distribute their works); it is ineffective; and it threatens the security and integrity of the Internet.

By putting Malaysia in between China and Iran in that sentence, we did not mean to imply that its level of censorship and repression of free expression is akin to theirs. That would be a false comparison. To our knowledge, Malaysia's action in this particular instance of copyright is a break from their history of fostering ICT development.

It is our hope that Malaysia will take steps to ensure it has no place on this list.

Stand with Tech Entrepreneurs; Call Congress now to Stop SOPA

Today, 17 Web luminaries sent a letter to Congress opposing SOPA - the Internet censoring, innovation killing copyright legislation.

Will you stand with them and call Congress now.

Please spread the word to friends too - SOPA is heading for a committee vote tomorrow, so time is of the essence. The founders' letter will run as print ads, full page in today's New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Washington Times, Roll Call, The Hill, Politico, and CQ. You will not be able to pick up a paper in the DC area (or, really, many other places) without reading this letter. There will also be an online ad on CNET, TechCrunch, Gigaom, and Mashable, and Politico already has a story up. The ads point to a call Congress alert run by Engine Advocacy: http://stopthewall.us/

White House Announces $2bln in Startup Support

“Today, we’re announcing $2 billion in public and private resources to help entrepreneurs start and grow their businesses. Now it’s time for Congress to do its part. It was encouraging to see members of both parties in the House come together to pass legislation that will help small businesses get ahead, and I’m calling on the Senate to do the same. But America’s small businesses can’t wait for these important tools to grow and hire faster,” said President Obama.

Read more at WhiteHouse.gov

TechDirt: The Engine Of Innovation Realizing It Can't Ignore DC Any More

Today marks

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the launch of an exciting new effort among the startup ecosystem: Engine Advocacy. If you're an entrepreneur, investor, innovator, creator or involved in the overall startup ecosystem, please check out the website and consider joining....

Read more at TechDirt.com

Full disclosure: Mike Masnick is an informal advisor to Engine Advocacy on policy matters.

Keep the Web #OPEN

One of the main criticisms Hollywood has levied at Silicon Valley throughout the SOPA/PIPA debate is "Hey, it's not a perfect bill but it's not like you guys are offering better solutions."

The esteemed gentleman from California (and a few friends) beg to differ.

Today, Congressman Darrell Issa launched KeepTheWebOPEN.com, a site on which he invites public comment on his proposed Online Protection and Enforcement of Digital Trade Act, which is envisioned as a more sensible option to protect copyright online by using international trade laws as enforcement mechanisms.

You can visit the website, read the proposed bill in full and add your voice to what you would like to see in the proposed legislation at the same time. So take a look, and do what you can to keep the web #OPEN.

Hi. We're Engine.

New_Democrats_1.jpg

We’re very excited to see our plans for Engine come to fruition - creating a platform for communication between one of the fastest growing and valuable industries and the decision makers in government is something we are very passionate about. We're launching our full website today and we want the site to be a collaborative space to engage on issues of importance to the tech industry - like our opposition to the controversial anti-piracy bills SOPA and PIPA.

We want Engine to be a catalyst for positive change that will benefit our community as a whole. That means creating a dialogue where none currently exists, and through action, education, and collaboration, changing the landscape of the American economy. We want Engine to be the portal through which you can become active and engaged - by being plugged into a network of other interested individuals, by directing public policy through legislative action, and by driving growth in key sectors.

You Don't Have to be a CS Major to Have an Idea

When you hear the phrase “tech industry” (and you do, you probably use it yourself all the time), most often the associations will be with consumer web companies and cleantech. That’s now a part of our cultural vocabulary, but technology isn’t the exclusive domain of these sectors. The word technology was around long before the dotcom boom, and there are still plenty of us who use the term in a far less narrow context.

Cleantech now dominates the conversation about transportation. The automotive industry has more and more cleantech entrepreneurs, but Toyota’s Prius and Fisker’s Karma are preceded by a long line of innovations, starting with the ancient civilizations who handily gave us the wheel, through to Karl Benz who invented the first practical, gasoline engine automobile so that his wife, Bertha, could take long distance trips.

Similarly, a half millennium of change in the way we communicate wasn’t spurred by a dynasty of web developers. Rather it was crafted by a handful of humble pragmatists looking to accomplish something. Gutenberg was looking for a better way to spread the good word. Sholes and Glidden a better way for typists to put words to the page. Carlson a better way to copy. And Tim Berners-Lee a better way to whip words around the globe. These pragmatists worked from simple ambition, but their creations ushered in a communications revolution.

So why do even those of us who work within the ‘Internet sector’ believe we have the monopoly on technology?

We don’t.

The lines have always been blurred, possibly nonexistent. Even businesses that exist on the periphery of the tech industry, companies like Craft Coffee and BirchBox, are an essential part of this relentless innovation in communication. They rely on the Internet as a core element of how they market, but fundamentally, they still produce and distribute traditional goods and services.

Let’s start calling what we do what it is. Technology is all about pushing humankind forward and developing new ideas, new processes, new goods, new methods, and new designs. It shouldn’t be a buzzword for one particular industry, or a moniker for some untouchable notion of invention belonging to the entrepreneurial elite.

Let’s honor the humble pragmatism of the innovators that came before us. The “tech industry” should be a simple solution to the problems we face. It should communicate better. It should make our words clearer. And it should be open to everyone.

After the Jobs Bill

Yesterday, in a widely anticipated vote, Senate Republicans blocked efforts by the Senate leadership and the Administration to pass the President’s $447 billion jobs bill. The maneuver leaves the President’s plan, laid out last month before a joint session of Congress and campaigned upon across the country for the last few weeks, dead on arrival. 

So where do we go from here? What is the next step that we can take now to get the Engine of growth in this country running again?
Simply put, we can’t, as entrepreneurs or advocates or the skilled-but-unemployed or politicians sit back and wait for next November. There are real, critical, dynamic issues that demand attention and need it now. 

One of those issues is immigration, and how we keep skilled labor, people of exceptional talent and thinking and entrepreneurs working in America. For years, the visa process has stood in the way of keeping that talent on our shores. In times past, with America booming and shining like the beacon of freedom and ingenuity to the world, we could overlook these types of issues. No one was going to start a business of promise anywhere but here.

But in a globalized world, things have changed. Whether it’s STEM students returning home because there simply are more job opportunities there, or others seeking opportunities in programs like Startup Chile, where you can apply for a 1-year visa and a $40,000 grant if you begin your startup process in Chile, or wanting to leave a position with a company as an immigrant to start your own business and losing your ability to do so in this country, the world has grown up to American standards - and in many ways, has passed them. 

Utah Republican Congressman Jason Chaffetz has introduced a bill to the Congress to begin advancing America’s cause in a small way. His bill, HR 3012 - the Fairness for High Skilled Immigrants Act, would work on amending one key piece of the puzzle in terms of allowing companies to hire high skill workers, as well as allowing those high skilled immigrants the opportunity to start businesses in America. Under current law, of the certain number of employer based visas issued every year, so called EB class visas, the allocation is done on a percentage basis by country of origin, with each country receiving 7% of the allocation. So, if you come from China, or you come from Liechtenstein, you have access to 7% of the pool, and is further exacerbated by the fact that it can lengthen wait times for green card status by decades. (Oh, and nothing against Liechtenstein, I hear it’s a beautiful country, we’re simply making an argument about scale here.)

Chaffetz’s bill would

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move that cap to 15% of the pool for countries with historically higher application rates and population pools in the short term, which in the long term should reduce the wait times for green cards to a more manageable length of time - Vivek Wadhwa of The Washington Post asserts they could fall to as little as 12 years or less. 

Again, this is not earth-shattering legislation, it will not fix our issues for entrepreneurs and visa limitations overnight, but it is roughly analogous to a common ground piece of legislation offered in the previous congress by California Democrat Zoe Lofgren, and, more importantly, it moves the conversation forward. And when you couple bills like the one offered by Chaffetz with moves like the ones taken by USCIS this week, namely the creation of an “entrepreneurs-in-residence” program to take a look at these issues, as well as the Startup America initiative, we begin to see a way to get past the talking points and the punditry and work towards real progress. 

In short, we have an opportunity here. Let’s take it, and together, move the conversation and start on the road to real reform, real progress and expansion of opportunity.